Past failures
Implementing something like FTT would hardly be a new idea, considering other governments have tried similar measures in the past.
In fact, they aleady exist in many countries such as Britain, South Korea, Hong Kong, Brazil, Germany, France, Switzerland, and China. But FTT-like measures haven't always worked.
And then there's the unique case of Sweden. From 1984 to 1991, the nation applied a financial transaction tax of 0.5% to purchases or sales of equity securities, fixed income securities, and financial derivatives.
The tax ultimately decreased trading volume of the most popular share classes by 60%, and much of Swedish equity trading moved offshore, according to the Tax Foundation. As a result, the tax raised far less money than was expected and was considered a failure.
More recently, the European Union has also been trying to implement its own financial transaction tax since 2011. But it's had little luck because of arguments that the tax wouldn't raise as much money as previously thought. Projections for how much the tax would actually raise have actually been dramatically lower than when the tax was first proposed.
In 2013, the EU projected the tax would raise as much as 35 billion euro annually. The latest estimate based on the performance of a similar tax in France is 3.45 billion euros, according to the Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan think tank based in Washington DC.
Alternate plans already in the works
US Senator Brian Schatz of Hawaii and US Representative Peter DeFazio of Oregon have already introduced legislation that also proposes a financial transaction tax, meant to address economic inequality. The Wall Street Tax Act proposes a smaller tax than Sanders' plan — it would levy 0.1% tax on the sale of stocks, bonds, and derivatives. It's estimated that it would raise $777 billion over a decade.
According to Baker, this plan may make more sense in the market currently.
"I don't think the Sanders plan will freeze up the markets, but I'd rather start with something smaller," he said. One good thing about the Sanders plan, he said, is that it is scaled for different assets.
Still, the Sanders campaign is very confident in analysis that shows the proposed plan could raise up to $220 billion in the first year and $2.4 trillion over ten years, Sarah Ford, deputy communications director of Bernie 2020, told Markets Insider in an email.
"Some 40 countries throughout the world have imposed a similar tax, including Britain, South Korea, Hong Kong, Brazil, Germany, France, Switzerland and China and their capital markets function just fine," Ford wrote.
She continued: "Placing a 0.5% tax on stock trades — 50 cents on every $100 of stock — a 0.1% fee on bond trades, and a 0.005% fee on derivative trades to pay for free college and student debt cancellation a decade after Wall Street's gambling tanked the economy is exactly what this country needs to create an economy that works for all."